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Tekcno Pow Wow Set for April 2

Northern Cheyenne eminent artist Bently Spang will present
the performance art piece “Tekcno Pow Wow III” Wednesday, April 2, at 7 p.m. in
the University of Wyoming Union Ballroom, in conjunction with UW’s Shepard
Symposium on Social Justice.

“’Tekcno Pow Wow III’ is an audience-participatory,
multimedia, group performance art piece,” says Spang. “It’s a cultural mashup
that brings together multiple dance forms including powwow dancing and break
dancing, along with a powwow drum and a DJ, to explore how cultures interact
and influence each other in the realm of creative expression.”

By creating a charged atmosphere that combines the live
event essence of powwow and hip-hop/rave with performance art and video
projection, Spang challenges dancers and audience members alike to “dance a
mile in each other’s moccasins, sneakers, ballet slippers, or whatever the case
may be” and, in so doing, gain valuable insight into one another’s lived cultural experiences.

He says the program challenges the notion that some
cultures, in particular Native American cultures, are static.

“Everyone feels they know who native peoples are, and yet
they continually put us in one time period,” Spang says. “You never hear
‘Indian’ and ‘future’ mentioned in the same sentence.”

Spang holds an MFA in sculpture from the University of
Wisconsin-Madison and a bachelor’s degree from Eastern Montana College in
Billings. He has taught at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston and
at Montana State University in Billings.

Funding from the Wyoming Excellence in Higher Education
Endowment, awarded to the American Indian Studies Program, sponsors Spang’s
residency at UW. A grant from the Wyoming Cultural Trust Fund will partially
sponsor the Tekcno Pow Wow.

For more information about “Tekcno Pow Wow III” or Spang’s
residency at UW, call the American Indian Studies Program at (307) 766-6521.
Visit www.shepardsymposium.org for more information about the Shepard
Symposium on Social Justice.